Udenrigsudvalget 2014-15 (1. samling)
URU Alm.del Bilag 162
Offentligt
The law is the law: legalistic distortions between
official Spain and Catalonia
opendemocracy.net
/can-europe-make-it/nick-rider/law-is-law-legalistic-distortions-between-
official-spain-and-catalonia
Nick Rider
17 November 2014
The Catalanists’ democratic credentials are shoehorned into a one-size-fits-all horror story of
minority nationalism that allows non-violent Catalans to be condemned in carelessly violent
language.
Throughout, the Rajoy government’s response to the massive campaign of protest in Catalonia over
the past five years has been legal, not political. This is based on the much-repeated point that any vote
on separation by any one part of the country is incompatible with Spain’s 1978 Constitution, and above
all Article Two, which declares that the Constitution is based on “the indissoluble unity of the Spanish
Nation, the common and indivisible homeland of all Spaniards”. Hence, a Catalan vote is illegal, plain
and simple.
Beyond that, any political approaches have been very hard to find.
This position has enabled Rajoy and his ministers to stand on their dignity as the defenders of the
Constitution and the rule of law, “without which there is no democracy”. In this they have generally
been supported by large sections of Spanish opinion outside Catalonia, including the overwhelming
majority of the non-Catalan media and the official opposition, the Spanish Socialist Party or PSOE,
which while using more conciliatory language, at least at leadership level, and proposing a reform of
the Constitution, has still insisted that for the meantime any regional independence vote remains
unconstitutional.
Until recently it has been widely acknowledged that Spain’s 1978 Constitution was an untidy
compromise agreed in the aftermath of the Franco regime. It served its purpose well as the basis for
the transition to democracy, but many feel its inadequacies have become ever more apparent and
many – including, as said, the PSOE – call for it to be substantially reformed. In the context of the
Catalan dispute, however, for conservative commentators and politicians the 1978 Constitution has
acquired the status of holy writ. And in particular the idea of the indivisibility of the Spanish nation, so
that decisions on sovereignty can only be taken by the people as a whole.
In Britain during the Scottish campaign it was sometimes observed that for the shape of the state to be
decided by Scots voting alone was an injustice, that the rest of the UK should have a say in it too, but
few pushed it very far; in Spain this has been erected into a sacred principle. Catalonia could only
leave Spain, it is declared, if a referendum across the whole of Spain agreed to let it do so, and any
local exercise of sovereignty by Catalans would be an aggressive act, an attack on the rights of other
Spaniards, a denial of their legitimate interests.
For those Catalans who already consider themselves a nation with a right to a sovereign existence and
who feel stifled within Spain, of course, to be told that they can only leave in the impossible scenario
that the whole of Spain votes to expel them just seems another form of abstract pedantry.
Legalism and wrapping oneself in the Constitution has given the Rajoy government a debatable claim
to the “moral high ground”, but it has been a political catastrophe. In practical terms, support for
Catalan independence has risen relentlessly throughout the time Rajoy has maintained his stonewall
approach, from around 15–20% in 2010 to 45 or 50% today. Support for the basic question of local
sovereignty, the “right to decide” in an independence vote, is even greater, at about 80%. One of the